Toronto Star

How America became a nation of yoga pants

Lululemon sparked a phenomenon with its engineered fabric

- KIM BHASIN AND GERALD PORTER JR.

The first pairs of yoga pants Lululemon sold in 1998 were a simple item for women to wear at the studio. They were a mix of nylon and Lycra — synthetic elastic fibres that provided the stretch and softness needed to manage all those sweat-inducing contortion­s during a lengthy session on the mat.

Yoga, first as an exercise and later as a cultural phenomenon (or cliché, depending on your cynicism) had yet to take hold. At the turn of the century, the pants filled a niche for yogis who were simply looking for a higher-end alternativ­e to plain cotton leggings.

Two decades later, they’ve conquered the closet, even for people who never see the inside of a yoga studio. In 2014, teenagers began to prefer leggings over jeans. Then people started wearing athletic clothing (or athleisure, but it’s mostly just yoga pants) to run errands. Now they’re wearing yoga pants to the office.

U.S. imports of women’s elastic knit pants last year surpassed those of jeans for the first time ever, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Fashion trends see-saw constantly, but rarely does an entire category shift. Over four decades, rubber-soled sneakers gave way to basketball shoes, which in turn fell to trainers. Boxer briefs didn’t exist 25 years ago — drawers were still filled with plain old briefs. But now the hybrid is America’s most popular men’s underwear.

Yoga pants have similarly managed to plunge denim into an existentia­l crisis, threatenin­g Levi Strauss & Co. so deeply that it had to scramble to adapt. The company added stretch and contouring to its jeans while hoping to retain some of their rugged essence.

The popularity of yoga pants has, predictabl­y, led to a flood of competitor­s as brands fill every market segment, from Old Navy’s $20 (U.S.) pants to Lucas Hugh’s $230 versions. Lululemon Athletica Inc., largely credited with bringing stretchy pants to the masses, has poured money into developing new fabrics to fend off rivals — a pack that now includes the world’s biggest athletics companies.

“Consumers expect a lot more,” said Sun Choe, chief product officer at Lululemon. “They’re washing their garments more and more, and from a quality standpoint, it needs to stand up. They’re expecting some versatilit­y in their product. They expect to be able to wear that pant or tight to Whole Foods or brunch.”

Lululemon’s original fabric, Luon, with a high proportion of nylon microfibre as opposed to a more typical polyester blend, was trademarke­d in the U.S. in 2005.

Many of its newer fabrics are branded and geared toward specific uses. Luxtreme is a moisture-wicking, four-way stretch fabric that’s meant to fit like a second skin. Nulux is a compressio­n fabric meant for sweatier workouts. Silveresce­nt is sold as Lululemon’s “stink-conquering technology,” using silver bonded to the surface of fibres to stop bacteria from reproducin­g. A T-shirt made from the material costs $78.

Leggings from market competitor­s use a similar strategy, promoting the versatile pants through branded fabric combinatio­ns. For Adidas, pants boast fabrics like its sweat-wicking Climalite material or the thermal-regulating Climacool and Climawarm to accommodat­e training conditions. Likewise, Nike’s Dri-Fit material keeps sweat at bay and trainers dry. Even Target’s C9-branded fitness collection flexes highfuncti­oning fabrics: Freedom Fabric is a soft blend of polyester and spandex for lifestyle or fitness, while its Embrace Fabric hugs tight to the body for a cosy feel. What was once a simple stretchy legging, it seems, has become an engineerin­g marvel. Not too surprising, though, when you realize that about $48 billion is being spent on this activewear in the U.S. every year.

The story of a breakthrou­gh product made by an upstart company that gets swallowed or crushed by America’s corporate behemoths is an old one. Lululemon is dead set on not letting that happen this time.

Tucked away in the basement of its Vancouver headquarte­rs is a lab called Whitespace, the retailer’s research and developmen­t skunk works. Here a team of about 50 employees works to come up with the brand’s next big idea. It’s developed lightweigh­t seamless bras and made yoga pants with repurposed yarn combinatio­ns normally used in lingerie.

The staff isn’t made up of just textile workers tasked with making new fabrics. It includes scientists as well as physiologi­sts, mechanical engineers, neuroscien­tists and biomechani­sts.

Alexandra Plante, director of innovation management at Whitespace, is responsibl­e for taking what she calls “duct tape prototypes” and turning them into actual products. With a background in materials engi- neering, she delves into fabrics, yarns and polymers.

Lululemon’s research arm does motion-capture testing and uses pressure sensors that allow researcher­s to test how garments work as they move. The team can even test “hand feel” to help it figure out how to “engineer sensations” for that critical commercial moment when you feel the fabric for the first time, Plante said.

Back when Lululemon sold nothing but Luon, the company saw customers using the pants for all sorts of workouts, including high-intensity training the fabric was never meant for.

So after R&D identified how consumers wore them, and for what, Lululemon developed material specific to each activity — hence the creation of pants for runners or dancers. Even Luon itself, the company’s original fabric, is different from what it was 20 years ago after years of tweaks and integratio­n of new tech.

Mistakes have been made, including one that was inherently — and spectacula­rly — calamitous. In 2013, Lululemon recalled pants for being too sheer, attributin­g the see-through problem to a manufactur­ing error. The subsequent destructio­n of the pants resulted in a loss of $67 million in sales. Choe said that problem has since been solved.

Now that it has a spectrum of products suited for most every movement, Lululemon has opened a pair of stores for those customers interested in still-experiment­al items. One of them, located in downtown Manhattan (the other is in Vancouver), looks more like a fashion boutique than a place to buy gear for the gym or yoga studio.

Yoga, as you might know, had been doing just fine for thousands of years without a stretchy uniform. The rise of yoga pants owes a lot to simple timing. Lululemon appeared on the scene at the tail end of the (perhaps unfortunat­e) leggings revolution, right about the time longer-term trends were leaning toward more casual dress.

The biggest businesses now in the athletic wear space have invested heavily in growing their womenswear lines — especially in developing new fabrics and features for the once-simple yoga pant.

In 2014, Nike began working toward a $7 billion sales target for its women’s business, reporting almost $5 billion in revenue. Executives realized women were “driving a larger global movement of health and fitness.”

A year later, the company reported that the global growth for women’s business was outpacing that of men. That same year, Adidas AG began directing its youth brand, Neo, toward younger women. The German sports giant even brought on former Lululemon chief executive officer Christine Day as a strategic adviser.

Active bottoms and leggings are now a $1 billion industry, according to NPD Group analyst Marshal Cohen. Their appeal to consumers has yielded rapid sales growth that shows no sign of going away, he said. Where Lululemon found success with female consumers by providing a niche product that could satisfy casual and active uses, major brands such as Adidas and Nike completed the picture.

 ?? XAUME OLLEROS BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO ?? Lululemon’s original fabric, Luon, has a unique blend of nylon microfibre that was trademarke­d in the U.S. in 2005.
XAUME OLLEROS BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO Lululemon’s original fabric, Luon, has a unique blend of nylon microfibre that was trademarke­d in the U.S. in 2005.
 ?? CARMINE MARINELLI QMI AGENCY FILE PHOTO ?? Lululemon has a special lab in Vancouver where scientists are constantly testing new fabrics.
CARMINE MARINELLI QMI AGENCY FILE PHOTO Lululemon has a special lab in Vancouver where scientists are constantly testing new fabrics.

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